# Hardcover: 400 pages
# Publisher: Atria; 1 edition (April 8, 2008)
# Language: English
# ISBN-10: 0743294254
# ISBN-13: 978-0743294256
This book is a sequel to Good in bed.I had read Good in Bed two years back. So I had to revisit Good in bed. I thoroughly enjoyed Certain Girls. I would recommend this book to all Weiner fans. There are lot of twists and turns to keep me guessing whats gonna happen next. I just finished the book and I am sad that the book is over. Looking forward to read the next one.
“A daughter’s journey through teen angst to realizations about family, acceptance, love, and the nature of truth.” — Elle magazine’s “Elle’s Letters” Readers’ Prize April Winner
Synopsis
Readers fell in love with Cannie Shapiro, the smart, sharp-tongued, bighearted heroine of Good in Bed who found her happy ending after her mother came out of the closet, her father fell out of her life, and her ex-boyfriend started chronicling their ex-sex life in the pages of a national magazine.
Now Cannie’s back. After her debut novel — a fictionalized (and highly sexualized) version of her life — became an overnight bestseller, she dropped out of the public eye and turned to writing science fiction under a pseudonym. She’s happily married to the tall, charming diet doctor Peter Krushelevansky and has settled into a life that she finds wonderfully predictable — knitting in the front row of her daughter Joy’s drama rehearsals, volunteering at the library, and taking over-forty yoga classes with her best friend Samantha.
As preparations for Joy’s bat mitzvah begin, everything seems right in Cannie’s world. Then Joy discovers the novel Cannie wrote years before and suddenly finds herself faced with what she thinks is the truth about her own conception — the story her mother hid from her all her life. When Peter surprises his wife by saying he wants to have a baby, the family is forced to reconsider its history, its future, and what it means to be truly happy.
Radiantly funny and disarmingly tender, with Weiner’s whip-smart dialogue and sharp observations of modern life, Certain Girls is an unforgettable story about love, loss, and the enduring bonds of family.